UBEC to Spend N2bn as Teachers, Pupils' Enumeration Begin
The Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) has disclosed that it intends to expend the sum of N2 billion on the 2022 nationwide national personnel audit of all basic education institutions in the country.
The Executive Secretary of UBEC, Dr. Hamid Bobboyi, said the exercise commenced in the southern part of the country on June 6, 2022, to end June 25, 2022, while it would commence in all the northern states and the Federal Capital Territory on July 4, 2022, and end on July 23, 2022.
The UBEC boss who made this known at a media briefing in Abuja, yesterday, said, “during the exercise, our enumerators will visit all basic education institutions in the country: public, private, approved, unapproved, registered and unregistered.
“They are going there to collect basic information on schools and personnel. It is necessary to emphasise that the exercise has no ulterior motive. The data being collected will assist the country to plan effectively towards expanding access to quality education and promoting gender parity at basic and other levels of education.
“This is a census; you have to send enumerators to every school in the federation. It is something we pegged at N2 billion. We are working under it. The bulk of it goes to personnel, because you have to maintain the people, those in difficult terrains, to access these places you have to hire boats and others.”
He added: “There are so many challenges, but at the moment, N2 billion is the figure we are using.”
While saying since the introduction of the UBE programme, a lot of ground had been covered, Bobboyi said lack of relevant and updated data which the exercise would address remained a major problem in the basic education sector.
“The absence of credible data had remained a major challenge in basic education implementation for a long time. School data is supposed to flow up from the school level but our schools lack the facility and the personnel to generate and transmit data.
“As a result of this planning had relied on estimates and, sometimes, incomplete data. The Commission attempted to address this challenge by conducting personnel audit in schools.
“The 2006 and 2010 exercises were limited in scope as they dealt with only public schools. A more comprehensive exercise was conducted in 2018, extending to cover both public and private institutions. Read More…